@Quehoniaomath,
Quehoniaomath wrote: Quote:Who are you trying to bamboozle? Egyptian moon worship is a hoax that has been pushed on us by archaeologists to keep money flowing for their "science." You can't provide a photograph of the moon taken by ancient Egyptians so clearly they didn't worship the moon since that was before the moon hoax.
lol, looks like you don't even understand it yourself.
Why are you talking to him at all? It may be true that I 'can't provide a photograph of the moon taken by ancient Egyptians' but even more true is that there exist evidences all over the murals of Anvient Egypt in support of the moon-god hypothesis ... throughout all the Egyptian history.
1. Chosu (the Traveller), the son of Amun Ra, is perceived as the Ancient Egyptian God of the Moon.
2. There are also other studies on the theme:
Quote:When depicted, the moon is most commonly represented as a combination of the full-moon disk with the crescent moon. Lunar gods were almost always shown with this symbol on their heads. At times, the full-moon disk could have a wadjat eye (either the left or the right), or a lunar god depicted within it. The moon was, like the Sun, frequently shown traversing the sky in a boat. The most complete extant depiction of the entire lunar cycle is found inside the pronaos of the temple of Edfu.
3. There is a bronze statuette of the moon god Iah from Egypt, Late Period, after 600 BC, in the British Museum - depicting the moon god Iah holding the eye of Horus
Quote:The god Iah, whose name means 'moon', first appears in the Late Period (661-332 BC). The moon god was assimilated with Osiris, god of the dead. Perhaps because, in its monthly cycle, the moon appears to renew itself. Iah also seems to have assumed the lunar aspect of Thoth, god of knowledge, writing and calculation; the segments of the moon were used as fractional symbols in writing.
BTW tell him that the lunatics are called so not because they believe in the full moon (which actually exists and is neither anything special nor unusual ... since ancient times), but because around full moon they get out of control, which is very much different.